Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. City of Fort Thomas

285 S.W. 228, 215 Ky. 384, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 228 (Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. City of Fort Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Light, Heat & Power Co. v. City of Fort Thomas, 285 S.W. 228, 215 Ky. 384, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 743 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Reversing.

The judgment from which this appeal is prosecuted enjoined the appellant gas company “from turning off, or in any manner interfering with the gas supply of the city of Fort Thomas, its inhabitants and consumers.” The correctness of that judgment is questioned by this appeal. Appellant company distributes and sells gas through its mains and pipes in the city of Fort Thomas to the municipality and other consumers. The franchise under which it began to operate was granted by the city in 1915 for a term of ten years. It expired by its. terms at midnight 'September 5, 1925. Before that time the city advertised a gas franchise for sale and appellant made a written proposition of purchase upon a higher level of prices for gas to the consumer. Conceiving the prices to be unreasonable the city council declined the bid and did not sell the franchise. The gas company, on August 5th, gave thirty days ’ written notice to the city through the mayor and city clerk of its purpose to discontinue the supply of gas Jo the city and its inhabitants at midnight September 5th, the time of the expiration of the franchise, and also advertised the fact in the Kentucky edition of the Cincinnati Enquirer and the Kentucky edi *386 tion of the Times Star, two newspapers of general circulation in the city of Port Thomas' at that time. On the afternoon of September 5th this action was instituted in Campbell circuit court, and a temporary restraining order issued by the clerk, enjoining appellant company and its agents from turning off the gas that night or at all until the court could, hear, the case.' In obedience to the order of the court appellant, under protest, continued to supply gas to the city and its inhabitants just as it had done under the franchise, not even taking advantage of the advanced rate allowed by the court under the impounding provision of the order later made. It moved the judge of the Campbell circuit court to set aside the restraining order, and on hearing this motion was overruled, whereupon it applied to a judge of this court for a dissolution of the injunctive order. The motion was heard by Chief Justice Clarke and Judges Thomas, Dietzman and Settle, and overruled on the ground “that in view of the great importance to the parties litigant and the public of the main question involved in the action, the temporary injunction should remain in force until the case shall have been determined upon its merits in the Campbell circuit court. Moreover, as the order of the circuit judge granting the injunction will fully preserve the status of the parties and their rights as they existed before the institution of the action, the continuance Of the injunction until the final judgment of the circuit court may be rendered,.will result in no injury to any of them.”

The case was then prepared upon its merits. In the meantime a proceeding was also instituted before the State Railroad Commission by the city of Port Thomas against the gas company, praying that body to take jurisdiction of the controversy under section 201e-l, Kentucky Statutes, and to make such orders as appeared necessary in the premises, directing and commanding the gas company to continue to furnish gas to the city and its inhabitants, and that the commission require the gas company to fix reasonable rates and prices for gas. The gas company filed a protest with the railroad commission in answer to the complaint, and the commission made an order overruling the demurrer of the gas company to the proceeding before the commission, assumed jurisdiediction, and directed the company to continue to furnish gas to the city and its inhabitants and to install and extend service pipes and otherwise carry on the business of *387 supplying gas in and to the city and its consumers. A copy of all the record of the proceeding before the State Railroad Commission is made part of the record in this case, that proceeding being instituted in pursuance to an act of March 22, 1920, now section 201e-l, Kentucky Statutes, the validity of which act is now also called into question.

This suit was originally instituted upon the .theory that the gas company, being a public service corporation and having exercised the right of laying its mains and pipes in the streets of the city and of distributing and selling gas to the city and its inhabitants for ten years, was without right even on the termination of its franchise, to withdraw from business in the city and cease to supply gas as before. In argument counsel for the city assert that under modern conditions of life many of the daily necessities such as light, heat and water can be acquired only through the great public service corporations, many of which are monopolistic in their scope and power, and that it is not only within the powers and rights of government to regulate and control such companies but the highest duty of government to do so; that when such company receives its exclusive franchise and installs its mains and pipes in the streets of the city it thus cuts off competition and obtains a monoply and it is charged with the duty of supplying the city and its inhabitants- with the commodity which it alone can furnish, and when its franchise expires it alone can and will bid for a continuance thereof, because no other concern can compete with it, in as much as it has its equipment already installed, and thus such concerns obtain a masterful control over the situation and obtain an advantage which puts the municipality and its inhabitants at its mercy. Several cases are cited and relied upon as authorizing and empowering municipalities, situated as appellee, Ft. Thomas, to require a gas company having plants in a city to continue to supply gas to the munici pality and its inhabitants after the expiration of the contract, because the company had, in a sense at least, a monopoly upon the supply of gas, owning the mains and pipes under the surface of the street and must -supply the commodity which no other concern can supply on equal terms, and not turn the city and its people back to antiquated methods of oil lights and coal ranges. A special reliance is had upon the unreported opinion of *388 Judge Hickenlooper of the federal district court, delivered in the case of United Fuel & Gas Co. v. Railroad Commission of Kentucky, in which it was said:

“One of the recognized duties of the public utility being to serve all who apply, such companies are not only subject to legislative regulation in this respect, N. & W. Ry. Co. v. Public Service Commission of West Virginia, 265 U. S. 70, 74, but this common-law duty_can be enforced by a court of equity. . . . The mere fact that the franchise in the various cities have expired does not make the continuance of this business illegal, for, under section 23 of the Railroad Commission Act, the enterprise is now to be considered a state venture, and not a municipal one. The state is the unit and not the municipality. There is no obligation to continue in the state, but if they do continue in the state they are subject to their common-law1 and statutory duties in all parts of the state, county, township and municipality. This would not only seem to be the result of recent legislation, but also to be the trend of judicial view in Kentucky and elsewhere. See Southern Railway Company in Kentucky v. Hachett, 174 Ky.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 228, 215 Ky. 384, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-light-heat-power-co-v-city-of-fort-thomas-kyctapphigh-1926.